Title: Democratic Governance
1INDICATORS AND MEASUREMENT POLICY IMPERATIVES
AND THE WAY FORWARD James George
Chacko UNDP-Asia Pacific Development Information
Programme (APDIP) Global Indicators Workshop on
Community Access to ICTs Mexico City,16-19
November 2004 Mexico City, Mexico
2- SITUATION ANALYSIS
- Governments are launching ambitious ICT
infrastructure initiatives, radically changing
their communications policy frameworks and
situating ICT at the heart of their development
programmes and strategy. - Many developing countries, businesses and
citizens groups are touting ICT as a means to
transcend structural and historical weaknesses of
developing nations in the economic, political,
and social spheres. They argue that ICTs offer
the developing world the opportunity to
leapfrog several stages of their development
and join the industrialized nations in the
information age.
3- IMPACT ON HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
- ICT as a sector of economic activity
- ICT as an enabler for enhancing human
productivity - Breaking barriers to human knowledge
- Breaking barriers to participation
- Breaking barriers to economic opportunity
4- IMPACT ON HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
- ICT as a sector of economic activity
- An obvious impact of ICT is its contribution as
an industry for the overall economic growth of a
nation. The ICT sector and industry have
witnessed unprecedented growth in the past
decade. Global spending on information and
communications technology was expected to grow
from US2.1 trillion in 1999 to US3 trillion in
by 2003.
5- IMPACT ON HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
- ICT as an enabler for enhancing human
productivity - used as control technology, leading to
innovations in products and processes in the
manufacturing sectors and resource extraction
industries. - ICTs have become indispensable ingredients in all
forms and processes of economic activity - directly expand choices through increased access
to information and knowledge in 3 ways
6IMPACT ON HUMAN DEVELOPMENT Breaking barriers
to human knowledge - becoming key delivery
mechanisms for sections of the population that
did not have access to educational infrastructure
and content. - actively used in promoting
life-long learning and continued education,
reintegrating unemployed people into the
workforce through re-education and retooling of
skills.
7IMPACT ON HUMAN DEVELOPMENT Breaking barriers to
participation Internet and ICT based news and
information groups have contributed to the
creation of a far more vibrant public sphere. In
many parts of Asia, where the mass media have
been and continue to be strictly controlled by
governments, the Internet has offered a new
medium of political mobilization and
participation.
8- IMPACT ON HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
- Breaking barriers to economic opportunity
- ICT sector requires less initial investment than
the more traditional sectors of industrial
activity, it lowers the barriers to entry into
the economy for people who could never break into
the industrial sector. - ICT provides new and unprecedented opportunities
to people who have proficiency in handling ICT
tools and have an idea or service to sell.
9STATISTICAL OVERVIEW Planners, policy makers and
researchers hold highly polarised and equivocal
views on the diffusion of Information and
Communication Technology (ICT), its role in
promoting objectives such as poverty alleviation,
universal education, reduction in mortality and
health hazards, and sustainable development, and
in bridging the digital as well as socio-economic
divides in the world.
10CASE STUDY Regional Human Development Report on
Promoting ICT for Human Development in Asia
Realising the Millennium Development Goals is
jointly prepared by the UNDP-Asia Pacific
Development Information Programme (APDIP) and the
Asia-Pacific Regional Human Development Reports
Initiative, Human Development Resource
Centre. attempts to go beyond the hype
surrounding the potential and promise of ICT for
developing countries
11- RATIONALE
- No such comparative study has been undertaken
that seeks to concretely assess progress of ICT
for development efforts in the Asia region. - By focusing on the lens of human development -
try to concretely link what is still
traditionally advocated as technology issue with
the organizations most recognized and primary
core business focus - promoting human development
and eradicating poverty.
12- MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
- Framework to identify the objectives of human
development as set by the UN and its member
states. - - Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger -
Achieve universal primary education- Promote
gender equality and empower women- Reduce child
mortality- Improve maternal health- Combat
HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases- Ensure
environmental sustainability - Develop a global partnership for development.
13- METHODOLOGY
- Research across 9 countries in Asia -- China,
India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mongolia, Pakistan,
Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Vietnam - based on a mix
of their Technology Achievement Index, including
leaders, potential leaders, dynamic adopters and
marginalized countries. - To operationalise a conceptual framework and
methodology to assess role and impact of ICTs on
human development, it would be of critical
significance to establish clear targets and goals
of human development as measuring success and
failure - systematic study using MDGs as a
benchmark.
14- SCOPE
- Review and assess progress in drafting and
implementing national e-policies and -strategies
for reducing poverty and enhancing human
development. - In addition researchers also considered other
factors, such as the proportion of cell phone
subscribers, Internet users and personal computer
owners, along with the charges for Internet and
phone service, Internet access in schools, the
proportion of women professional technical
workers, and competition among service providers,
etc.
15- SCOPE (cont.)
- Exploration of potential and promise of ICT
- Mapping status of ICT use and diffusion in Asia
- Case studies and best practices of ICT
application - Identification of challenges of ICT application
- Selection of ICT indicators relevant for human
dev. - Construction of a composite aggregate index that
ranks the nine countries on their ICT use for
achieving human development goals.
16- RESEARCH APPROACH
- 3 Levels of analysis and outputs
- Country Studies
- Regional Report
- Qualitative Index/ Indicators
17- RESEARCH APPROACH
- 3 Levels of analysis and outputs
- Country Studies (Specific)
- 9 country studies commissioned to national
experts in the field of ICT and human
development, to conduct detailed country-specific
assessment of national ICT infrastructure,
policies, governance mechanisms, priority areas
of ICT use, private initiatives, and
institutional frameworks programmes for promoting
ICT access and training.
18RESEARCH APPROACH 3 Levels of analysis and
outputs b) Regional Report (Thematic) Overall
Research Coordinator drew from 9 country studies
to systematically explore linkages assess
status of ICT use and diffusion in Asia document
varied case studies and best practices of ICT
application identify challenges of ICT
application analyse the limitations of ICT in
furthering human development draw lessons from
multi-country experiences to identify policy
directions.
19RESEARCH APPROACH 3 Levels of analysis and
outputs c) Qualitative Index/ Indicators A
parallel quantitative study to complement the
rich qualitative research was carried out to -
select ICT indicators relevant for human
development - examine interdependency between
indicators of ICT and human development -
construct of a composite aggregate Index that
ranks the nine countries on their use ICT use for
achieving human development goals.
20QUANTITATIVE APPROACH Selected indicators were
used to construct a set of thematic component
indices covering five distinct dimensions of ICT
availability and use -- i)skill-independent ICTs
ii)skill dependent ICTs iii)efficiency and speed
iv)social sector targeting and v)vulnerable group
targeting. The component indices were then
aggregated into a composite aggregate ICTforHD
index, capturing ICT-MDG relationships.
21SAMPLE RESULTS Malaysia is highest on the
reports ranking of ICT use for human development
(known as the ICTforHD Index), well ahead of
China and Thailand. The rankings of the next
countries India, Mongolia, Pakistan and Sri
Lanka vary depending on the statistical method
used, while Indonesia ranks third from last and
Viet Nam last.
22SAMPLE RESULTS India ranked high in targeting
vulnerable groups for its high proportion of
female professional and technical workers, public
Internet access, laws on ICT use and competition
among service providers. China, second overall,
ranked sixth in this area.
23- INDICATORS
- Policy input requires both tangible and
intangible measurements its a continuous
cyclic process - Tangible Connectivity of local relevant
content costs infrastructure technology, etc. - Intangible Capacity skills purpose
usability sustainability management
socio-economic structure.
24- ISSUES
- What Primary questions have to centre on
definition, methodology, collection, analysis,
evaluation, accuracy, comparability, standards,
and sufficiency. - Who Role and Tasks
- How Design, implement, analyse, disseminate
- Why Purpose and objective
- - Policy / up streaming cyclic process
- - Dissemination input and development
25CONCLUSION The study concludes that while
availability or supply-side indicators of ICT are
undoubtedly important from the human development
perspective, more information needs to be
gathered on access, types of applications,
characteristics of users, content, etc. Thus
the demand side needs to be brought in much more
strongly to capture the spread of technology
across social and economic classes, regions,
sexes,etc. Data on ICT availability and use
across rural-urban, male-female and other
categories could help in quantifying digital
divides.
26- CONCLUSION
- Clearly indicate that with regards to specific
areas of human development, strategic deployment
of ICTs can help in advancing human development
by alleviating poverty, enhancing education and
improving healthcare. - However, a simple and technologically
deterministic vision of ICTs and their impact on
human development must be avoided.
27BENEFITS The Index could be a very useful tool
for policy makers to help them focus more sharply
on those specific dimensions of ICT for human
development where there are weaknesses - data
includes indicators on the extent that countries
target some social sectors and rural groups,
which is a significant contribution to monitoring
the digital divide.
28THANK YOU
- James George Chacko
- james_at_apdip.net
- Wisma UN, Block C
- Kompleks Pejabat Damansara
- Jalan Dungun, Damansara Heights
- 50490 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
- Tel 603 2095 9122
- Fax 603 2093 9740